25.03.2013 Views

The Babylonian World - Historia Antigua

The Babylonian World - Historia Antigua

The Babylonian World - Historia Antigua

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

CHAPTER SEVENTEEN<br />

SOCIAL CONFIGURATIONS<br />

IN EARLY DYNASTIC BABYLONIA<br />

( c . 2500– 2334 BC)<br />

<br />

Petr Charvát<br />

<strong>The</strong> third segment of the Early Dynastic period (c.2500–2334 BC, henceforth<br />

ED III) in south-eastern Mesopotamia represents an age when city-state centres<br />

competed with each other for power, for glory and the favour of the gods. Numerous<br />

cuneiform tablets and archaeological artefacts allow us to sketch a broad outline of<br />

the Sumerian society of that age, as it lived its sacred and profane days, months and<br />

years.<br />

THE KING<br />

Let us begin by examining the sources of the kings’ revenues. First and foremost,<br />

they drew on their own personal property, which they inherited from their ancestors.<br />

Enmetena of Lagash, for instance, records that he made a pious donation of land<br />

which he had presumably inherited from his illustrious forefathers. 1 Second, they<br />

could rely on shares in public (landed) property, due to them as citizens of their<br />

native community. An example of this is given by texts such as RTC 66, in which<br />

a sovereign’s official disposes of grain harvested from a ‘state’ field. 2 In fact, these<br />

fields were classified in Sumerian as ni3-en-na, ‘demesne-holding’, which refers to a<br />

part of the original landed property of a temple. Even the sovereign’s consort could<br />

have held ni3-en-na land, 3 theoretically not private, but ‘divine’ property. <strong>The</strong> land’s<br />

first couple could also enjoy possession of kur6 land, 4 a kind of ‘salary’ or remuneration<br />

to citizens who performed services for the temple. Such land, however, fell to them<br />

by the same legal title as it could fall to any Lagash burgers. 5 <strong>The</strong> arable itself<br />

evidently ‘belonged’ to somebody else, most probably to the gods.<br />

A third source of royal income consisted of any emoluments accruing in consequence<br />

of the tenure of their office. We can see an example for this kind of siphoning off of<br />

the surplus at Lagash: 6 part of the harvest of a field plot has been ‘taken in charge’<br />

by the sovereign(’s men) and disposed of according to his instructions, while another<br />

part went to a storage facility called Ekilamka. 7 However, not all the field plots<br />

referred to in Lagash texts belonged solely to the sovereign’s family. With whom the<br />

rulers shared these lands is not particularly clear, though deities seem to figure<br />

251

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!